Thou shall not enter! (No, really, don't)

Support questions or request for help See the support page for available options. In other words, do not ask questions within the user notes.

References to other notes or authors This is not a forum; we do not encourage nor permit discussions here. Further, if a note is referenced directly and is later removed or modified it causes confusion.

Code collaboration or improvements This is not to suggest that your code snippet is bad; this is simply not the place to show it off. You should publish elsewhere (perhaps on your blog).

Links to your website, blog, code, or a third-party website On occasion we permit the posting of websites such as faqs.org or the MySQL manual, but links to other sites will be removed, no matter how well-intended.

Complaints that your notes keep getting deleted Most likely you didn't bother to read this page and you violated one of these rules.

User notes may be edited or deleted for any reason, whether in the list above or not!

Email address conversion

We have a simple conversion in place to convert the @ signs and dots in your
address. You may still want to include a part in the email address
that is understandable only by humans as our conversion can be performed in
the opposite direction. You may submit your email address as
user@NOSPAM.example.com for example (which will be displayed
as user at NOSPAM dot example dot com. If we remove your note we can
only send an email if you use your real email address.

Formatting

Note that HTML tags are not allowed in the posts, but the note formatting
is preserved. URLs will be turned into clickable links, PHP code blocks
enclosed in the PHP tags <?php and ?> will
be source highlighted automatically. So always enclose PHP snippets in
these tags. Double-check that your note appears
as you want during the preview; that's why it is there!

Additional information

Please note that periodically the developers go through the notes and
may incorporate information from them into the documentation. This means
that any note submitted here becomes the property of the PHP Documentation
Group and will be available under the same license as the documentation.

Your IP Address will be logged with the submitted note and made public on the
PHP manual user notes mailing list. The IP address is logged as part of the
notes moderation process, and won't be shown within the PHP manual itself.

It may take up to an hour for your note to appear in the documentation.

The SPAM challenge requires numbers to written out in English, so, an appropriate
answer may be nine but not 9.